Free in-home assessment
Start with a conversation, at home
The assessment is free, it happens in your parent's home, and it ends with a written care plan and a price. There is no commitment to use us afterward.
What happens at the assessment
We schedule a visit at your convenience
Mornings, afternoons, or evenings. We come to you, in any of the cities we serve.
A coordinator listens
We sit down with whoever is making decisions — your parent, you, sometimes both — and learn about routines, history, and what is hardest right now.
We walk through the home
Bathrooms, bedrooms, stairs, the kitchen. We are looking for safety and for the small details that make a care plan realistic.
We write a one-page care plan
Plain English. What the caregiver does, when, and what it costs. You keep a copy.
You decide
If it is a fit, we match a caregiver and schedule a meet-and-greet. If it is not, that is fine too — no follow-up calls, no pressure.
No commitment, no pressure
In our experience, about a third of families move forward right after the assessment, about a third call us back weeks or months later, and about a third decide a different kind of care fits better. That is fine. The assessment is a tool for figuring out what your family actually needs — not a sales call dressed up as one.
Before you schedule — a few common questions
- What should I expect during the visit?
- A care coordinator (not a salesperson) comes to the home, sits down with whoever is making decisions, and asks about routines, medical history, mobility, sleep, meals, and what is hardest right now. We walk through the home together — bathrooms, bedrooms, stairs, kitchen — looking for safety details. We leave with a written one-page care plan and a clear price. No paperwork to sign that day.
- How long does the visit take?
- Most assessments take 45 to 75 minutes. Simple companion-care situations can finish in about 45 minutes; complex cases — dementia, multiple ADLs, multiple family members involved — usually run closer to 75 minutes. We do not rush, and we do not run long without your okay.
- What documents should I have ready?
- Nothing is required, but the visit goes faster if you can have these on hand:
- A current medication list (names and doses)
- A short list of doctors and recent diagnoses
- Emergency contacts and the primary decision-maker's information
- Any existing care plan, discharge summary, or hospital paperwork from the last 6 months
- Long-term care insurance policy details, if applicable
If you don't have any of this — that's fine. We can still do a useful assessment.
Request an assessment
Fill this out and we will call within one business day. Or call us right now at (951) 480-7080.
